Jennifer Lopez’s Floral-Print Sundress Is Peak Spring
And you can get the exact look for yourself here

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Maximalism is officially having a moment, and thank the fashion gods for it. The era of whispering your way through a outfit—all beige, all restraint, all the time—is officially over. We're talking bold prints, statement bags, stacked accessories, the whole maximalist fantasy. And if you needed permission to lean into it, Jennifer Lopez just gave you one.
Over the weekend in Los Angeles, Lopez stepped out in a pastel floral midi that screamed spring without apology. The dress—a House of CB Elia sundress, according to Harper's Bazaar—featured an ivory base scattered with yellow, pink, and purple blooms. The construction alone was details-forward: a sweetheart neckline with structured underwire cups, subtle corsetry at the bodice, and a tiered skirt finished with a ruffled strip. This isn't a dress that disappears into the background. It announces itself.
The Accessories Tell the Real Story
But here's where Lopez's styling philosophy gets interesting. Rather than letting the dress stand alone, she layered on. Brown leather platform boots from Coach grounded the look, while a Hermès Kelly picnic bag—complete with wicker body, chocolate leather trim, and whimsical cherry-shaped leather charms—elevated the whole situation. A dainty silver pendant and oversize sunglasses finished the equation. Nothing clashed. Everything worked, precisely because she committed fully to each piece.
This is the real lesson in dressing loud: conviction matters more than cohesion. Lopez didn't second-guess the floral print, didn't downplay it with neutral everything, didn't try to make it "work" by playing it safe elsewhere. Instead, she met the dress's energy with equally purposeful accessories. The farmer's market vibe meets luxury handbag energy. The playfulness of cherry charms pairs with the precision of corsetry. It's a vocabulary that makes sense when you're fluent in maximalism.
The takeaway isn't that you need a Kelly bag or House of CB dress to get the memo—it's that spring is the perfect season to stop hedging your bets on boring.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


